8,686 research outputs found

    Spread spectrum-based video watermarking algorithms for copyright protection

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    Merged with duplicate record 10026.1/2263 on 14.03.2017 by CS (TIS)Digital technologies know an unprecedented expansion in the last years. The consumer can now benefit from hardware and software which was considered state-of-the-art several years ago. The advantages offered by the digital technologies are major but the same digital technology opens the door for unlimited piracy. Copying an analogue VCR tape was certainly possible and relatively easy, in spite of various forms of protection, but due to the analogue environment, the subsequent copies had an inherent loss in quality. This was a natural way of limiting the multiple copying of a video material. With digital technology, this barrier disappears, being possible to make as many copies as desired, without any loss in quality whatsoever. Digital watermarking is one of the best available tools for fighting this threat. The aim of the present work was to develop a digital watermarking system compliant with the recommendations drawn by the EBU, for video broadcast monitoring. Since the watermark can be inserted in either spatial domain or transform domain, this aspect was investigated and led to the conclusion that wavelet transform is one of the best solutions available. Since watermarking is not an easy task, especially considering the robustness under various attacks several techniques were employed in order to increase the capacity/robustness of the system: spread-spectrum and modulation techniques to cast the watermark, powerful error correction to protect the mark, human visual models to insert a robust mark and to ensure its invisibility. The combination of these methods led to a major improvement, but yet the system wasn't robust to several important geometrical attacks. In order to achieve this last milestone, the system uses two distinct watermarks: a spatial domain reference watermark and the main watermark embedded in the wavelet domain. By using this reference watermark and techniques specific to image registration, the system is able to determine the parameters of the attack and revert it. Once the attack was reverted, the main watermark is recovered. The final result is a high capacity, blind DWr-based video watermarking system, robust to a wide range of attacks.BBC Research & Developmen

    Space-variant picture coding

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    PhDSpace-variant picture coding techniques exploit the strong spatial non-uniformity of the human visual system in order to increase coding efficiency in terms of perceived quality per bit. This thesis extends space-variant coding research in two directions. The first of these directions is in foveated coding. Past foveated coding research has been dominated by the single-viewer, gaze-contingent scenario. However, for research into the multi-viewer and probability-based scenarios, this thesis presents a missing piece: an algorithm for computing an additive multi-viewer sensitivity function based on an established eye resolution model, and, from this, a blur map that is optimal in the sense of discarding frequencies in least-noticeable- rst order. Furthermore, for the application of a blur map, a novel algorithm is presented for the efficient computation of high-accuracy smoothly space-variant Gaussian blurring, using a specialised filter bank which approximates perfect space-variant Gaussian blurring to arbitrarily high accuracy and at greatly reduced cost compared to the brute force approach of employing a separate low-pass filter at each image location. The second direction is that of artifi cially increasing the depth-of- field of an image, an idea borrowed from photography with the advantage of allowing an image to be reduced in bitrate while retaining or increasing overall aesthetic quality. Two synthetic depth of field algorithms are presented herein, with the desirable properties of aiming to mimic occlusion eff ects as occur in natural blurring, and of handling any number of blurring and occlusion levels with the same level of computational complexity. The merits of this coding approach have been investigated by subjective experiments to compare it with single-viewer foveated image coding. The results found the depth-based preblurring to generally be significantly preferable to the same level of foveation blurring

    Data compression techniques applied to high resolution high frame rate video technology

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    An investigation is presented of video data compression applied to microgravity space experiments using High Resolution High Frame Rate Video Technology (HHVT). An extensive survey of methods of video data compression, described in the open literature, was conducted. The survey examines compression methods employing digital computing. The results of the survey are presented. They include a description of each method and assessment of image degradation and video data parameters. An assessment is made of present and near term future technology for implementation of video data compression in high speed imaging system. Results of the assessment are discussed and summarized. The results of a study of a baseline HHVT video system, and approaches for implementation of video data compression, are presented. Case studies of three microgravity experiments are presented and specific compression techniques and implementations are recommended

    Perceptual modelling for 2D and 3D

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    Livrable D1.1 du projet ANR PERSEECe rapport a été réalisé dans le cadre du projet ANR PERSEE (n° ANR-09-BLAN-0170). Exactement il correspond au livrable D1.1 du projet

    Full-reference stereoscopic video quality assessment using a motion sensitive HVS model

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    Stereoscopic video quality assessment has become a major research topic in recent years. Existing stereoscopic video quality metrics are predominantly based on stereoscopic image quality metrics extended to the time domain via for example temporal pooling. These approaches do not explicitly consider the motion sensitivity of the Human Visual System (HVS). To address this limitation, this paper introduces a novel HVS model inspired by physiological findings characterising the motion sensitive response of complex cells in the primary visual cortex (V1 area). The proposed HVS model generalises previous HVS models, which characterised the behaviour of simple and complex cells but ignored motion sensitivity, by estimating optical flow to measure scene velocity at different scales and orientations. The local motion characteristics (direction and amplitude) are used to modulate the output of complex cells. The model is applied to develop a new type of full-reference stereoscopic video quality metrics which uniquely combine non-motion sensitive and motion sensitive energy terms to mimic the response of the HVS. A tailored two-stage multi-variate stepwise regression algorithm is introduced to determine the optimal contribution of each energy term. The two proposed stereoscopic video quality metrics are evaluated on three stereoscopic video datasets. Results indicate that they achieve average correlations with subjective scores of 0.9257 (PLCC), 0.9338 and 0.9120 (SRCC), 0.8622 and 0.8306 (KRCC), and outperform previous stereoscopic video quality metrics including other recent HVS-based metrics

    Non-disruptive use of light fields in image and video processing

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    In the age of computational imaging, cameras capture not only an image but also data. This captured additional data can be best used for photo-realistic renderings facilitating numerous post-processing possibilities such as perspective shift, depth scaling, digital refocus, 3D reconstruction, and much more. In computational photography, the light field imaging technology captures the complete volumetric information of a scene. This technology has the highest potential to accelerate immersive experiences towards close-toreality. It has gained significance in both commercial and research domains. However, due to lack of coding and storage formats and also the incompatibility of the tools to process and enable the data, light fields are not exploited to its full potential. This dissertation approaches the integration of light field data to image and video processing. Towards this goal, the representation of light fields using advanced file formats designed for 2D image assemblies to facilitate asset re-usability and interoperability between applications and devices is addressed. The novel 5D light field acquisition and the on-going research on coding frameworks are presented. Multiple techniques for optimised sequencing of light field data are also proposed. As light fields contain complete 3D information of a scene, large amounts of data is captured and is highly redundant in nature. Hence, by pre-processing the data using the proposed approaches, excellent coding performance can be achieved.Im Zeitalter der computergestützten Bildgebung erfassen Kameras nicht mehr nur ein Bild, sondern vielmehr auch Daten. Diese erfassten Zusatzdaten lassen sich optimal für fotorealistische Renderings nutzen und erlauben zahlreiche Nachbearbeitungsmöglichkeiten, wie Perspektivwechsel, Tiefenskalierung, digitale Nachfokussierung, 3D-Rekonstruktion und vieles mehr. In der computergestützten Fotografie erfasst die Lichtfeld-Abbildungstechnologie die vollständige volumetrische Information einer Szene. Diese Technologie bietet dabei das größte Potenzial, immersive Erlebnisse zu mehr Realitätsnähe zu beschleunigen. Deshalb gewinnt sie sowohl im kommerziellen Sektor als auch im Forschungsbereich zunehmend an Bedeutung. Aufgrund fehlender Kompressions- und Speicherformate sowie der Inkompatibilität derWerkzeuge zur Verarbeitung und Freigabe der Daten, wird das Potenzial der Lichtfelder nicht voll ausgeschöpft. Diese Dissertation ermöglicht die Integration von Lichtfelddaten in die Bild- und Videoverarbeitung. Hierzu wird die Darstellung von Lichtfeldern mit Hilfe von fortschrittlichen für 2D-Bilder entwickelten Dateiformaten erarbeitet, um die Wiederverwendbarkeit von Assets- Dateien und die Kompatibilität zwischen Anwendungen und Geräten zu erleichtern. Die neuartige 5D-Lichtfeldaufnahme und die aktuelle Forschung an Kompressions-Rahmenbedingungen werden vorgestellt. Es werden zudem verschiedene Techniken für eine optimierte Sequenzierung von Lichtfelddaten vorgeschlagen. Da Lichtfelder die vollständige 3D-Information einer Szene beinhalten, wird eine große Menge an Daten, die in hohem Maße redundant sind, erfasst. Die hier vorgeschlagenen Ansätze zur Datenvorverarbeitung erreichen dabei eine ausgezeichnete Komprimierleistung

    Stereoscopic video quality assessment using binocular energy

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    Stereoscopic imaging is becoming increasingly popular. However, to ensure the best quality of experience, there is a need to develop more robust and accurate objective metrics for stereoscopic content quality assessment. Existing stereoscopic image and video metrics are either extensions of conventional 2D metrics (with added depth or disparity information) or are based on relatively simple perceptual models. Consequently, they tend to lack the accuracy and robustness required for stereoscopic content quality assessment. This paper introduces full-reference stereoscopic image and video quality metrics based on a Human Visual System (HVS) model incorporating important physiological findings on binocular vision. The proposed approach is based on the following three contributions. First, it introduces a novel HVS model extending previous models to include the phenomena of binocular suppression and recurrent excitation. Second, an image quality metric based on the novel HVS model is proposed. Finally, an optimised temporal pooling strategy is introduced to extend the metric to the video domain. Both image and video quality metrics are obtained via a training procedure to establish a relationship between subjective scores and objective measures of the HVS model. The metrics are evaluated using publicly available stereoscopic image/video databases as well as a new stereoscopic video database. An extensive experimental evaluation demonstrates the robustness of the proposed quality metrics. This indicates a considerable improvement with respect to the state-of-the-art with average correlations with subjective scores of 0.86 for the proposed stereoscopic image metric and 0.89 and 0.91 for the proposed stereoscopic video metrics

    Foveated Video Streaming for Cloud Gaming

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    Good user experience with interactive cloud-based multimedia applications, such as cloud gaming and cloud-based VR, requires low end-to-end latency and large amounts of downstream network bandwidth at the same time. In this paper, we present a foveated video streaming system for cloud gaming. The system adapts video stream quality by adjusting the encoding parameters on the fly to match the player's gaze position. We conduct measurements with a prototype that we developed for a cloud gaming system in conjunction with eye tracker hardware. Evaluation results suggest that such foveated streaming can reduce bandwidth requirements by even more than 50% depending on parametrization of the foveated video coding and that it is feasible from the latency perspective.Comment: Submitted to: IEEE 19th International Workshop on Multimedia Signal Processin
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